LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 



014 223 844 5 f. 



129 
H9 HS2 
opy 1 



NEW YORK STATE LOCAL HISTORY 
TOWN RECORDS 

PREPARED BY THE DIVISION OF ARCHIVES AND HISTORY 



THE RECORDS OF HUNTINGTON, 
SUFFOLK COUNTY 



ROMANAH SAMMIS, LOCAL HISTORIAN 



ALBANY 

THE UNIVERSITY OF THE STATE OF NEW YORK 

192I 



Y32r-Mr2i-isoo (7-6191) 






LIBRARY OF CONQRIII 

SEpaUMt 




m 



PREFACE 

This inventory of the Huntington town records was made by 
a committee of which Mrs Irving S. Sammis, the local historian 
of Huntington, was chairman. Another form of classification in 
which all the records would be arranged according to the offices 
which were responsible for their making might be considered more 
desirable. In the case of Huntington, however, some records 
were so changed about and then bound up in permanent bindings 
at the time when the printed volumes referred to in the inventory 
were published that a scientific system of classification is out of the 
question. Another difficulty in the way is that no thorough study 
of the history of town government and town offices in New York 
State has ever been made, so that we are in no position at present 
to arrange records according to the best archival methods. Until 
such a complete study has been made, so that we shall know all the 
town offices that have ever existed, when they came into being, when 
they ceased to exist and what records were supposed to be kept in 
connection with them, we shall never know how complete or incom- 
plete our town records are. Desirable as such information is from 
the point of view of trying to locate missing records, it is of the 
utmost importance at the present time for us to have an inventory 
such as Mrs Sammis has made, for it shows us what records we 
have in the year 1920 and establishes a starting point for future 
activities. 

James Sullivan 

State Hi'^torian 
Director 0} the Division of Archives and History 



HUNTINGTON TOWN RECORDS 
Introduction 

By purchase from the Indians at various times, that body of land 
lying upon Long Island to the east of the Queens (now Nassau) 
county line and stretching from Long Island sound to the Atlantic 
ocean came into the possession of the whites and soon assumed the 
nature and title of a town known as Huntington. The first purchase, 
or the northwest portion, was made in 1653; the second, or the north- 
east portion, in 1656; the various necks of both north and south 
shores were purchased separately, as were also the Baiting Place 
and other south upland sections; and finally there were bought 
" all other unpurchased lands " in the interior. Naturally these 
purchases were indefinitely bounded and controversies and court 
proceedings were necessary to settle the limits of individual holdings 
and to establish township lines. 

On the east the line decreed by Fletcher's patent (1694) to begin 
at the north with the west side of the Fresh pond and run south 
b}^ the west side of Whitman's hollow to the Sumpwam's river and 
thence to the sea is the line that was finally surveyed and marked in 
1S72 and 1884. Defining the limits among the islands to the south 
of the mainland, valued so highly for fisheries, thatch and meadow 
grass, was a troublous business, but in agreement with the towns of 
Islip and Brookhaven a line was finally drawn in 1834. 

The establishment of a permanent western boundary by agreement 
with Oyster Bay tov/nship was made in i860, this settlement still 
leaving Lloyds Neck a part of Oyster Bay. In 1886, by act of the 
State Legislature, after petition by the inhabitants, that neck — 
originally Horse Neck and later the Lordship or Manor of Queens 
Village — became, as its geographical position naturally m.akes it, 
a part of Huntington township. 

In the meantime it was deemed advisable to divide the original 
township of Huntington and by act of the State Legislature of 
March 13, 1872, the township of Babylon was created from the 
southern part. 

Very early in our town records we come upon regulations to pre- 
vent nonresidents taking clams, fish etc. from the waters of the town. 
It was a question that was forever coming to the front, nonresidents 
disputing the town's ownership of lands under water. In 1859 
the trustees decided to employ counsel and determine the town's 

5 



rights. A suit brought to trial at a circuit court at Riverhead was 
decided against the town. In 1871, after an exhaustive examina- 
tion of the subject, the case was taken to the Court of Appeals 
which decided that, under the colonial grants, the lands under 
water in Northport bay — the particular region in question — 
belonged to the town. A stubborn fight by nonresidents was con- 
tinued and the case was carried before the United States Supreme 
Court which in 1894 upheld the decision of the Court of Appeals, 
since which the town's territorial claims have been unquestioned. 

Coincident with the 1872 division of the territory of the old town, 
the trustees of Huntington township contracted for an examination 
and revision of the town records and for a binding of some of them 
into volumes with indexes. As a result of this work, a considerable 
part of the general town records were, in 18S7, 1888 and 1889, 
printed in three volumes of these dates, and, as all the material so 
printed pertained to the old town, the township of Babylon bore a 
certain portion of the expense of this printing and received a like 
proportion of the volumes. It is probable that a special effort was 
made to obtain subscribers to the first volum.e, with the idea that 
its owners would want the other volimies as issued. That it did not 
work out that way is evidenced by the comparative scarcity of 
volume I. The town now owns 20 copies of that volume, 62 of 
volume 2 and 92 of volume 3, and the set may be bought for $10, 
single volumes for $3.50. At the time of printing, the revision 
committee contemplated a fourth volume which should include 
certain land grants and highway records to that date. Could such 
a volume now be printed containing, in addition to these, a com- 
plete detailed index of the four volumes it would be invaluable, 
as the indexing of the three printed volumes is inadequate. 

For the original material of the printed volumes readers are 
referred to Court Records, Town Meetings, Deeds, Surveys, Land 
Grants, Trustees' Proceedings (these being bound manuscript 
volumes), to " O " (signifying Onderdonk's Revolutionary Inci- 
dents) and to File Numbers (these designating certain unbound 
manuscripts arranged in numerical order and tied in packages). 

In the half century since the 1872 revision of the records, cus- 
todians of greater and less efficiency have come and gone and the 
town's effects have been moved from place to place. Finally set- 
tled into the new town hall in 19 10, the confused mass of accumu- 
lated material, now carefully gone through for the first time, dis- 
closes that losses have occurred and that some officials have been 
careless in not leaving behind them proper records of their work. 




Vault 



During the progress of the present inventory three bound manu- 
script volumes have been recovered from other custody and placed 
in the town hall. While that building is of so-called fireproof con- 
struction and the contents reasonably safe, the bulk of the original 
material hereafter listed is in the town safes or vault or vault annex. 
Exact location is designated wherever possible. 

Inventory 

Section i 

Huntington Town Records (printed) Vol. i, 1653-1688. . .20 copies 

Vol. 2, 1 688-1 77 5. . .62 copies 
Vol. 3, 1776-1873 . . .92 copies 
Library case, second floor 

Section 2 

PATENTS 

1 Richard Nicolls to Town of Huntington, Nov. 30, 1666. Original 

parchment (imperfect) and Governor George Clinton's Exempli- 
fication of same, Sept. 12, 1793. 

2 Thomas Dongan to Town of Huntington Aug. 2, 1688. Gov- 

ernor George Clinton's Exemplification of, Sept. 13, 1793. 

3 Benjamin Fletcher to Town of Huntington, Oct. 5, 1694. Original 

(perfect) . 

4 Thomas Dongan to William Nicolls, July 28, 1688. Gov- 

ernor George Clinton's Exemplification of, July 25, 1791. 

5 Benjamin Fletcher to William Smith, Oct. 9, 1693. Governor 

George Clinton's Exemplification of, July 26 1791. 
Nos. 4 and 5 relate to lands of disputed town ownership. 

Safe 



Section j 

DEEDS AND GRANTS 

1 Indian. See package 2, section 24. 

2 Deeds, Vol. i, 1669-17 10. (Bound) 
Deeds, Vol. 2, 17 10-1746. (Bound) 

Deeds, Vol. 3, 1746-1789. (One of 1793, one of 1797) (Bound) 
Index, to 1789. (Bound) 
Land Grants of Trustees, 1694-1802. (Bound) 



7 Surveys and Land Grants, 1697-1787. (Bound) 



8 Book of Transcription. Made in 1769 and containing trans- 

cription of land grants, etc. from several small books, 1666- 
1724. (Bound) 

1-8, vault 

9 Indexes. See package 11, section 24. 

10 Trustees' grants. See package i, section 24. 

11 Assorted papers (10) of town interest. See package 6, section 24. 

12 Assorted papers between individuals. See package 3, section 24. 

(See also section 23) 

Section 4 

TOWN MEETINGS 

1 Vol. I, 1657-1783. 

2 Vol. 2, 1 784-1840. 

3 Vol. 3, 1841-1872. 

4 Abstract of, 1657-187 1. 

Vault 

5 Reports of, 1872 to date, included in town clerk's bound records 

of all town transactions. 

6 Unbound. See package 9, section 24. 

Section 5 

COURT RECORDS 

1 Volume (bound) contains copy^ of " Duke's Laws" and Records, 

1659-1695; one case, 1781; one case, 1783; Summons, 1791. 

Vault 

2 Justices' Dockets: Wood, i volume, 1 861-1864; Monfort, 

I volume, 1 862-1 880; Rolph, 2 volumes, 1 865-1 880; Street, 
4 volumes unbound, 1881-1884; Loundes, 10 volumes, 1897- 
1907; Valentine, 2 volumes, 1904-1913; Partridge, i volume, 

1914-1917. 

Vault annex 

Section 6 
trustees' proceedings 

I Two books in one, 1837-1865 and 1865-1871. This also contains 
trustees' accounts for 1 862-1 870. 



' This is a manuscript copy and is scemin'^ly contemporary with the copies 
now at Manha'^sct (Xorth PTcmpstcad) and Easthampton. The copy at Albany 
is of later date. 



2 Vol. I, 1872-1893. 

3 Vol. 2, 1893-1914- 

4 Vol. 3, 1914 to date. 



1-4, vault 



5 Unbound. See package 6, section 24. 

6 Unbound. Civil War. See package 14, section 24. 

7 Thatch Books and Accounts. See package 7, section 24. 

Section 7 

STRAYS AND EAR MARKS 



1 Bound volume, 17 45-1 831. 

2 See Court Records, Item i. 



1-2, vault 



3 See package 16, section 24. 

Section 8 

REVOLUTIONARY WAR CLAIMS 

1 Vol. I, 1 7 76-1 783. (Tall) 

2 Vol. 2, 1 776-1 783. (Short) 

Vault 

3 Unbound. See package 4, section 24. 

(See also section 21) 



1 Vol. A, 1724-1851. 

2 Vol. B, 1852-1867. 

3 Vol. C, 1868-1872. 

4 Vol. D, 1872-1884. 

5 Vol. E, 1884-1907. 

6 Vol. F, 1907 to date. 

7 Index. 



Section g 



HIGHWAYS 



I to 7, safe 



8 Unbound. Petitions for, orders for, road districts, overseers 

etc., undated and from 1689 to 1899. In 17 numbered pack- 
ages, marked " Highways " and dates of contents. 
Librar}^ closet, second floor 

9 Maps. See section 20. 



10 
Section lo 

TOWN EXPENSES 

Early accounts are largely made up of expenditures of overseers 
of the poor. 

1 Unbound. Undated papers and from 1711 to 1871. These 

are in twelve nt.mibered packages marked " Town Expenses " 
and dates of contents. In " Town Chest " in vault annex. 
With these are three other related packages, as follows: 
a Records of illegitimacy, 1752-1861. 

b Records of people moving to or from the township. These 
were placed with the overseers of the town where they 
settled and fixed responsibility for their support in case 
of need upon the town from which they moved. Whole 
families are listed in some of these papers. 1 765-1835. 
c Records of apprenticeship, indentures, 1741-1859. 
Negroes born into slavery, manumissions etc. 1795- 
1824. 

2 Vol. I, Accounts, overseers of poor, 1805-1862. With list of 

overseers, 1805-1865. 

Vault annex 

3 Vol. 2, Daybook — Overseers, assorted entries. Rules for care 

of poor, lists of poor dead, " hired out," " bound out," inmates 
of almshouse, etc. Period corresponds to item 2. 

Vault annex 

4 Several partly filled ledgers of scattered dates left by overseers. 

Third floor 

5 From April 6, 1872 to March 28, 1899 all town accoimts are 

entered in bound volumes of Town Board Minutes, such board 

acting as auditors. 

Safe 

Section 11 

BOARD OF AUDITORS 

1 Vol. I, October 1899-March 19 15. 

2 Vol. 2, April 1915-October 19 1 9. 

3 Vol. 3, October 19 19 to date. 

Yearly accounts of supervisor passed by board of auditors cover all 

town expenses. 

Vault 



II 

Section 12 

TAX LISTS 

1 Unbound. See package 5, section 24. 

2 Estimates of taxes, 1 763-1 791. (Bound) 

Vault 

3 Series of tax books, 181 1 to date. 

Vault annex 

Section ij 

SCHOOLS 

1 Vol. I, 1841-1871. 

2 Vol. 2, 1S72 to date. 

3 Vol. 3, Moneys, 1856-1866. 

4 Vol. 4, Moneys, 1872-1914. 

Apportionments etc., to date — Supervisor's accounts. 

5 Unbound. In thirteen numbered packages marked " Schools " 

and dates of contents: (i) Huntington Academy and Union 
School, with lists of exemptions, 1859 to 1864; (2 to 11) Dis- 
trict Schools; (12) District botmdaries and alterations; (13) 
Records of births, marriages and deaths made by district 
clerks in 1847, '48, '49 and '50. 
Vault annex 

6 Map of Union School District. 

Safe 

Section 14 

VITAL STATISTICS 

1 Early records of births occur in items 2, 4 and 7, section 3, and 

also in item i (a and c) and in item 3, section 10. 

2 Marriages are recorded in item i and in item 2 (Monfort, p. 

332-36, 1872-1880), section 5. 

3 Deaths are recorded in item 3, section 10. 

4 Church record. See package 12, section 24. 

5 Bound volume — Label B M D — January 1847 to December 

1849. 

6 See item 5, section 13. 

7 Classified records (bound), 1880 to date. 

Safe 



12 

Section 15 

EXCISE 

1 Unbound paperf5, including early recognizances, in twelve 

numbered packages marked " Excise " and dates of contents, 

1787-1907. 

Library closet, second floor 

2 See package 13, section 24. 

Section 16 

SLAVES 

1 Bound (small volume) Records of Manumission. 

2 Manumissions, item 4, p. 620-47, section 3. 

3 See item i (c), section 10. 

Section ly 

OATHS AND BONDS 

1 In seven numbered packages marked " Oaths and Bonds " 

and giving dates of contents, 1 776-1889. 
Library closet, second floor 

2 Of officials now serving. 

Safe 

Section 18 

CHATTEL MORTGAGES 

1 In thirty-three numbered packages marked " Chattel Mortgages " 

and dates of contents: (i) Manuscript pamphlet with mort- 
gages of 1784 to 1793, together with mortgages 1S42-1848; 
(2 to 33) include 1849 to 1907. 

Library closet, second floor 

2 1907 to date. 

Vault 
Section ig 

ELECTION MATERIAL 

1 Vol. I, Poll Lists, 1784 to 1796 and 1868 to 1872. 

2 Vol. 2, Canvasses, 1799-1852. 

3 Vol. 3, Canvasses, 1853-187 1. 



13 

4 Unbound. Tied and marked by years, a signifies poll lists, 

b signifies canvass; (i) 1864, see no. 15, section 24; (2) 1873 to 

1876, a — partial; (3) 1874, a, b; (4) 1875, b; (5) 1876, 6; (6) 

1877, 6; (7) 1879, b; (8) 1880, b; (9) 1881, b; (10) 1882, b; (11) 
1883, a; (12) 1884, b\ (13) 1885, a; (14) 1886, b; (15) 1887, a; 
(16) 1888, a; (17) 1889, a, b; (18) 1893, b; (19) 1898, b; (20) 
1899, b; (21) 1909, a; (23) 1912, a, b; (24) 1913, a; (25) 1914, 
a; (26) 1915, a; (27) 1916, a, 6; (28) 1917, a, b; (29) 1918, a, 
6; (30) 1919, a, b. 

Not all lists and canvasses are complete. 

Items I, 2 and 3 are in vault. No. i of item 4 is in safe. Remainder of 
item 4 is on third floor, except latest poll lists, which are in vault 

5 Concerning elections and election districts. See package 13, 

section 24. 

6 Map of Fourteen Election Districts. 

Safe 

Section 20 

MAPS AND CHARTS 

1 See package 4, section 24. 

2 In addition to many drawings in highway volumes, there is a 

bound file of sections showing all highways of the town. Detail 
maps of highways are also filed in thirteen divisions corres- 
ponding to the thirteen sections of town highways. 

3 1914. Roads Abandoned by Superintendent of Highways. 

4 1804. Part of Long Island, showing Huntington Town, from 

DeWitt's New York State. 

5 1844. Long Island and Southern Connecticut. 

6 1873. Long Island. 

7 Long Island, used in Court in 1893 by David B. Hill. 

8 1858. Suffolk County. 

9 i860. Huntington Village. 

10 1683 and 1734. Lloyds Neck. On one sheet. 

11 187 1 and 1873. Long Island R. R. — North division, with school 

districts located. 

12 Main Huntington — Cold Spring Harbor Roads. Old. 

13 1859. Huntington — Oyster Bay Line from head of Cold Spring 

Harbor to South Turnpike. 

14 1872. Huntington — Oyster Bay Line from head of Cold Spring 

Harbor, northerly, to terminus. 

15 1883. Showing Stone Monuments on shores of Huntington Bay. 



^4 

1 6 1883. Showing Stone Monuments on shores of Northport Harbor. 

17 1907. Detailed government map of Huntington Bay. 

18 i876-'79-'82. Huntington Town's Oyster Lots with List of Lessees. 

19 1876. Oyster Lots of Huntington and Lloyds Harbors. 

20 1879. Oyster Lots of Northport Harbor with Lessees. 

21 1882. Oyster Lots of Northport Harbor with Lessees. 

22 Undated. Oyster Lots in Huntington Bay. 

23 1887. Oyster Lots in Huntington Bay. 

24 Undated. Recent. Oyster Lots in Huntington Township. 

25 Oyster Lot No. 106. 

26 Roll — Northport Harbor and Batons Neck Beach sections. 

27 Roll — Huntington Harbor sections. 

28 Roll — Cold Spring Harbor sections. 

29 191 7 — Atlas — West part of north shore of Suffolk County. 

30 Huntington Fire District. 

31 Huntington Manor Fire District. 

32 Election Districts (14) of Huntington Town. 

33 Huntington Union vSchool District. 

Many maps and prints of properties used by assessors. 

Section 21 

MILITARY RECORDS 

1 Bound. Vol. I. Military Rolls, 185 1 to 1866 and Record of 

Troops furnished by Huntington township, Apr. 15, 1861 to 
Oct. 23, 1865. 

2 Bound. Vol. 2. Exemption C'aims, 1862. 

Vault 

3 Civil War. See package 14, section 24. 

4 Civil War. Election. See package 15, section 24. 

5 Census, 191 7. 

Vault 

A record of Huntington Town's Sennce, European War, 1914-18, 
is being compiled. When completed, a copy will be filed with the 
town clerk. 

Section 22 

BOARD OF HEALTH 

1 Vol. I, 1871. 

2 Vol. 2, 1872-1898. 

3 Vol. 3, 1899-1913. 

4 Other reports 1913 to date. 

Va--:lt 




Vault Annex 

At upper right is " Town Chest " (See Section X) which for 
many years was the sole repository of the town's records, 
passing from the custody of each town clerk to that of his 
successor. 



J5 
Section 2j 

LEASES BY TRUSTEES 

1 Lease Book A, 1805-1871. 

2 Lease Book B, 1872-1895. 

3 Lease Book C, 1895 to date. 

4 Lease Ledgers, by Supervisors, to date. 

Vault 

Section 24 

MISCELLANEOUS 

The many unbound and unrelated papers referred to in the three 
printed volumes of town records by file numbers are arranged 
numerically in five numbered packages and marked " Originals of 
Printed Papers " and with file numbers of contents: i contains 
nos. I to 99; 2, nos. 100 to 199; 3, nos. 200 to 311; 4, nos. 312 to 374; 
5, nos. 375 to 421, 2 blanks and the files of Batons and Lloyds Neck 

Papers. 

Safe 

With these packages is filed a list of their contents in numerical 
order, giving title, date and number and page of printed volume where 
each may be found. Errors, duplications, omissions etc. may be 
found by this list. 

Other unbound papers are arranged in packages as follows : 
No. I Trustees' Grants: Orders for Surveys, undated and 1679- 

1793- 
Surveyors' Returns, one undated and 

1699-1779. 
These are the grants referred to in the introduction as 
intended for printing in a proposed fourth volume. 

Safe 

No. 2 Indian Deeds and Agreements. 

Safe 

No. 3 Deeds, mortgages, releases, agreements, letters etc. between 
individuals, 1677-1860. 

Vault annex 

No. 4 (a) Maps and Charts, undated and 1694-1868. 

(b) Revolutionary Claims and List of Woodland belonging 
to Capt. Conklin's Company. 

Safe 

No. 5 Assessment Rolls and Estimates of Estates, 1683-1862. 

Safe 



i6 



No. 6 Deeds etc. (originals and copies) of possible town interest: 
a 1657, Alexander, Anne and Richard Bryan — Henry 

Baldwin, o. 
b 1657, Sarah Baldwin — Richard Baldwin, o. 
c 1685, Crabmeadow Lands. 2. c. 
d 1688, Dongan Patent, c. 
e 1694, Confirmation of patent and memorandum of 

moneys paid (1755) for suit against Huntington, c. 
/ 1697, Patent to Stevanus Cortland, c. 
g 1 8 10, Trustees to George Sammis, West Neck Meadow, o. 
h 18 19, Trustees to Gilbert v'^ammis. o. 
i 1825, Land East End of Huntington to Trustees, o. 
y 1883, Trustees to Abbie Baldwin, Huntington Bay Beach, o. 

Safe 
No. 7 " Thatch Books " of Necks, Meadows and Islands, both 
north and south sides of township. Also " Island Note 
Books," Trustees' Accounts. 1 730-1860 
Safe 
No. 8 a Town Boundaries. 

b The Division of Huntington and Babylon. 
c Papers concerning other Long Island towns. 
Safe 
No. 9 a Fence Viewers — Claims for animals killed, 1S6S-1911. 
b Scattered Town Meeting records, 1795-1906. 
Vault annex 
No. 10 a Concerning the Town's Title to Lands under Water. 
b The Charles G. Kelsey Case, 1 873-' 74. 
c Concerning the Binding and Printing of the Town Records. 
Vault annex 
No. II Manuscript indexes (8) — five undated and 1770, 1771, 
1778. These doubtless refer to small books of original 
land records later incorporated in the boitnd volumes of 
deeds and grants, section 3. Their index value is gone 
on account of the transcribing or repaging of the books but 
they are retained as of possible use in recovering names, 

etc. of their period. 

Safe 

No. 12 Churches: a 1833, Subscriptions toward Painting First 

Presbyterian. 
b 1883, Incorporation of Northport Baptist. 
c Records of Huntington First Universalist, 

1872-1912. 

In safe drawer 



17 

No. 13 a Record of Division of Township into four Election Dis- 
tricts, with inspectors for each district, 1842. 
b Petitions: 1847, Excise; 1859, Inhabitants of East 
Street for public use of " the Green "; Undated, to have 
Town Meetings held at Greenlawn; 1887, Petition and 
Act to have Town Meetings held in Election Districts; 
1 89 1, Against extending Huntington Rural Cemetery to 
the north; For Voters of Election district No. 7 to be 
changed to Fairground instead of to Melville; 191 1, 

Excise. 

In safe drawer 

No. 14 Civil War Period. Trustees' resolutions as to war funds, 
etc.; Aflfidavits for acceptance for U. S. Service; List of 
MiHtia, 1861; Relief Ticket Certificates; Relief Tickets; 
Exemption Claims; Trustees' Notes. 
Safe 

No. 15 Civil War Period. Election, November 1864. Partial 

canvass. Challenges. Affidavits. Soldiers' Votes, 127th 

N. Y. Volunteers. 

Cafe 

No. 16 a 1664, Copy of Royal Proclamation by George Cartright. 
b 1 68 1, Private Paper — Abiall Titus. 
c 1732, Advertisement of lost Gelding by John Carpenter 

of Oyster Bay and Account of Horse Neck Moneys. 
d 1773, Account of Sheep Sold — with marks. 
e Forage Return, Printed form — - Daniel Wier, Com. Gen. 

— Revolution. 

/ Petition for release, Uriah Hubbs to Maj. Gen. Pattison 

— Revolution. 

g 1805, Inventory of Huntington Town Records. 

h i82o-'2i-'2 2, Suffolk County Pedlars Licensed. 

i 1838, Act of Incorporation, Huntington Mutual Fire 

Insurance Co. 
j 1840, Account — Foxes caught by James F. Hartt. 
k List of Papers sent to Albany by Silas Wood. 
/ 1904, Notice of vSuit for Damages, George C. Hendrickson 

against the town of Huntington, 
m Northport Papers (3) 

n 1896, Cold Spring Harbor Fire District Established. 
In safe drawer 




014 223 844 5 4 



